Congregational Meditation in Tariqa Eliyahu


One  of  the  hallmarks  of  Tariqa Eliyahu’s  Path is  its  practice of silent mental prayer as a congregation. 

The  principal  rationale for  this  activity is derived from R. Abraham HeHasid’s commentary on the   three day retreat at Sinai and the specific “preparation and sanctification” that leads to group prophetic experience. (see our essay on this HERE)

 But the  Communal Khalwa-Hitbodedut that we perform weekly in Safed has another, albeit secondary, function—namely the generation of a sense of confraternity and bonding between all members of  the  Tariqa present.

 One can be certain of  the  importance of solitude and  solitary devotion in the Jewish-Sufi path of the  mediaeval Egyptian Hasidim of the  Maimuni circle—it was the penultimate  maqam (station) of their contemplative system—and  yet one  of the outstanding characteristics of their practice is  that it generated a movement, a confraternity of  salikun (seekers)  practicing both solitary contemplation and  yet also seeking to bond as a group with shared  aims and practices.

 

Gershonides  (R. Levi ben Gershon,1288 –1344)  says that the   strength of an  individual soldier is multiplied exponentially when  he   enters  a battle in the company of like-minded soldiers.

Those who aspire to become sufis are engaged in a jihad (battle) with the nafs, the  “lower” self.  That is an ascetic process of purification that was part of  the  Jewish-Sufi  maqamat systems of R. Bahya Ibn Pequda and R.  Abraham ben Ha Rambam. One  of the  differences between their respective  approaches is that the  former was promoting a  private meditative practice, whereas the  latter was also building  a community of contemplatives.   

In Tariqa Eliyahu HaNabi we are similarly engaged in a shared jihad as a spiritual community—and each of us has the power to contribute both support and encouragement by linking up with other members of the Order in prayer, in thought, in person, and online.

 We aim to renew and  develop   the Path of the Egyptian Hasidim— and therefore,while much of our own adab (praxis)is concerned with solitude and solitary devotions: We are also a Jewish-Sufi Order, and this involves shared responsibilities as a confraternal congregation.  

  Those who are not able  to attend the  Safed meetings geo-physically are encouraged to link-up in some mental and spiritual way at the  time  of  the group meeting, or at sometime  on the day it is scheduled to occur.   Members are particularly encouraged to recite (silently and  mentally) the  formal Wird/Litany of the  Tariqa on the  day of the meetings  if they have time. If this  is  not possible, then even a brief thought or  a short prayer  would  be  sufficient  to generate something of  a bond with the  other salikun in the   Tariqa. 

Our Jewish-Sufi mystical tradition insists that the Light that is generated by such activity can, somehow, be transmitted to all worlds.  

In Kuntres Maarat HaLev , I quoted R. Levi Yitzhak of Berditchev on the effectiveness of such spiritual activity  when he  claimed (with an unintended reference to fana and  baqa! ):

“When man nullifies himself completely and attaches his thoughts to Nothingness,  then  a new sustenance flows into all the universes. This is a sustenance  that did not exist previously.”

 The Chassidic Masters, R'Aryeh Kaplan, page 73,

I would  also suggest that Tariqa members might spend  some  time  on Shabbat in intentional (mental and  spiritual) bonding with the other members of  the  Tariqa.  Again, just  a few moments   very briefly but with kavanah.

Personally I make  an intention of this nature in the  Mi Sheberach prayer  during the  formal Shabbat liturgy, mentioning every Tariqa member by name.  In the late Shabbat afternoon, after Minchah and  before Arbit, I also repeat this activity before performing a solitary and  mental Dhikr and Khalwa.

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The  halachic requirement for performing formal prayer with a minyan is in accord with the  notion of Gershonides stated above. But in the  Kifaya, Rabbenu Abraham ben Ha Rambam applies the  same principle  to  the  kind  of concentration that is part of congregational Khalwa. He makes a specific point of highlighting the generative power of  this  kind of silent hitbodedut  when it is performed as a group

  We know  that his Jewish-Sufi Hasidic movement saw khalwa (both as reclusive solitary retreat and as silent and concentrated meditation in solitude) to be the  primary  method for  the  attainment/reception of certain  levels  of prophetic intuition and insight—but it might  come  as something of  a surprise to many to read that he also saw the same activity increase in effectiveness when such silent “retreat”is performed in a congregational setting.     R. Abraham writes:


“Whenever the concentration of ten individuals who have joined together for prayer...is combined, it is greater than the concentration of each of the ten praying individually. 

Mysteries are thereby revealed by intuition (asrar yakshufuhu al-dhawq) to one who has followed the Paths of the Pietists and contemplated their diverse states...

There are certain times and certain states that can enable an individual to attain serenity in contemplation (khalwah)  in which his mind is purified in his state of contemplation  far more than it is during formal public prayer.” 

(Rabbi Avraham ben ha-Rambam:  Sefer ha-Maspik le-‘Ovdey Hashem, Kitab Kifayat al-‘ābidīn; (translated N Dana) p188)

 

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At the moment: Our tiny nation is under intensive attack—regionally, globally, and even  internally — and I believe that  our spiritual effort  is urgently needed as much as the  military and political one.  Perhaps it is needed even more.

That is another reason why it is important that our Tariqa members should supplement their solitary private khalwa (hitbodedut) and their  recollection of the  Divine (zhikr-hazkarah)  by practising such contemplative silence with other group members  at our weekly meetings wherever possible.

 By doing this, they can generate  a shared   blessing and  peace which can uplift both the  Tariqa members and the entire nation. 

Even if one cannot attend  the Safed Jewish-Sufi  meetings in person, one may share in its beraka by having the  kavanah to be there in spirit.

As an oft-quoted  European Hasid is reputed to have said:

One  is  where one’s  thoughts  are”.



Nachman Davies

Safed

3rd April 2025